Just before E3, Bungie announced that they would be taking Destiny 2 to the next logical level and letting you play the game anywhere you happen to own it with those same guardians. If you switched to PC, or want to, or want to join friends on Xbox One, you can transfer your characters at a then-unspecified date. Now it seems Bungie is ready to launch their cross-save initiative next week.

The news comes from a fairly pithy tweet from the Destiny 2 account, alongside an associated frequently asked questions post.

The questions and answers do clear up a lot of questions for people who haven't been keeping on every aspect of the cross-save changeover. Silver will be kept to the platform you got it on, as will platform-specific weapons, but for the most part all the important aspects of your guardians will be transferred over the cloud with a Bungie account.

It's been quite a few years since Sam Fisher, the protagonist of the Splinter Cell series, has headlined a brand new game in two-decade old series. While fans have been begging Ubisoft to do more with the goggle-wearing superspy, Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot has said that the pressure on a new game is too great. Now Guillemot is changing his tune a bit and appears to be hinting at a new game, but ducking the pressure entirely by going a different, unspecified direction with it.

While in China, Guillemot spoke with outlet GamerSky and confirmed that a new Splinter Cell project is in the works. Don't expect it to be a traditional Splinter Cell game, though.

"There will be some new types of experiments," Guillemot answered when asked specifically about Splinter Cell, "but on more different devices. We are working a little bit on the brand today to come back at one point. We can’t say when, because, as you know, it takes time. But each time we have to find the right experience to come back big."

Earlier this month, Tyler "Ninja" Blevins announced that he would be switching to Microsoft's Mixer platform for his future streaming career. The exclusivity agreement was a big boon for Mixer, which has long-struggled with challenging Twitch's Amazon-backed dominance, and theoretically took Twitch's most popular streamer away from them. Since then, Twitch has been using Ninja's username and channel to promote other streamers, which took an ugly turn when one streamer Twitch promoted began airing pornography on their channel.

Putting aside that using Blevins' 14.7 million-follower channel for advertising other streams seems somewhat petty, Twitch ended up recommending an account airing full-screen pornography with a streaming thumbnail on the page. Twitch then had to apologize to Blevins over the incident.

"The lewd content that appeared on the Ninja offline channel page grossly violates our terms of service," Twitch CEO Emmett Shear said on Twitter. "We've permanently suspended the account in question. We have also suspended [recommending other channels on the channel] while we investigate how this content came to be promoted."

At E3 two years ago, developers at Mojang got on stage to announce a host of different Minecraft initiatives, such as an ambitious attempt to get every version of Minecraft into the same ecosystem. Snuck in between several of these announcements was the public reveal of what Mojang called the Minecraft Super Duper Graphics Pack, an optional graphics pack that reskinned the game with higher-resolution textures, better lighting, shadows, and 4K support to come in Fall 2017. Two years later, they have announced that the project has ceased development.

Mojang announced cessation of the Super Duper Graphics pack on their website today, stating that the performance hit was a bit too much for every platform.

"We realise this is disappointing to some of you – there was a lot of enthusiasm for Super Duper from inside and outside the studio – but unfortunately, we aren’t happy with how the pack performed across devices," the developers wrote in a blog post. "For this reason, we're stopping development on the pack, and looking into other ways for you to experience Minecraft with a new look."

When you're a child, everything seems a little bit bigger and a little bit more dangerous than it actually was. This level of imagination-fueled adventure is the fundamental basis of Knights and Bikes, a story of two girls traversing their neighborhood on a British Island with an adorable artstyle. Today, developer Foam Swords announced that the game will be releasing in just a few weeks on August 27.

The game is developed by Rex Crowle and Moo Yu, two friends who met while working at Media Molecule. Knights and Bikes is itself a coming of age story starring two friends Nessa & Demelza, who have heard tell of a treasure in their sleepy little town and are out to find it.

Mike Pondsmith, the creator of the original Cyberpunk tabletop game, has been very active in the development of the highly-anticipated game based on his work. There is a lot of material to adapt and a lot of work to be done; however, the world of Cyberpunk 2077 won't just be adapting its creator's mind.

"I have a role. I actually recorded for one role, but they came up with a different one for me, but I can’t tell you much more than that. And I’m telling you that because there are a lot of fans who are going, ‘He better be in the game somewhere.' So I’m in the game. I’m figuring what happens is, you know, at some point, [Johnny Silverhand] is playing his guitar and I’ll come out and play my bass [laughs]."

Considering EA recently sent out alpha play test invites for a new Plant vs. Zombies shooter by the Garden Warfare team, it's very plausible that this trademark is exactly that. Codenamed "Picnic," the game itself is yet to be announced.